A new dimension to the cult at the palace of Zominthos and its beginnings in the Paleopalatial period (1900-1700 BC) was discovered this year during the annual excavation of the Archaeological Society conducted on Psiloritis by the Honorary Head of Antiquities, Dr Efi Sapouna-Sakellarakis.
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| View of excavations at Zominthos [Credit: Ministry of Culture and Sports/ Archaeological Society at Athens] |
This year, vessels of worship and other offerings placed in hollows of the rock came to light: egg cups (simple vases in the shape of a cup with a disc-like base), either plain or painted black (sometimes with white stripes on black or painted red). As argued by Efi Sapouna-Sakellaraki, this is a cult practice known to date from the Minoan peak sanctuaries.
The building complex had been founded on the rock as shown by scattered remains over all the area. In the southwest part whose final form was revealed in this year’s excavation, there are two- and three-storey rooms with paved or wooden floors on the rock.
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| View of excavations at Zominthos [Credit: Ministry of Culture and Sports/ Archaeological Society at Athens] |
In the same area, part of a chalice was unearthed and a small bronze spoon predating 1750 BC, i.e. before the destruction of the first palaces. In excavation terms, it is the first time a combination of a rock with a multistory building is encountered in a centre of habitation.
It has only been found depicted on a stone vessel in relief from the Gypsades region in Knossos, where a kneeling worshipper is depicted offering up an object to an altar between some rocks and above which a building can be seen.
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| Bronze dagger that came to light at Zominthos [Credit: Ministry of Culture and Sports/ Archaeological Society at Athens] |
This year’s excavation work increased the overall excavated surface by 100 sq. m. and revealed more interesting architectural elements.
One in particular is an entrance from north to south with a double door which led to a paved area built on a suitably shaped part of the rock. In Minoan times this paved area might have been used as an open-air space for games or ceremonies.
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| Stone vase from the excavation at the palace of Zominthos [Credit: Ministry of Culture and Sports/ Archaeological Society at Athens] |
Another impressive paved entrance was revealed on the building’s northeast side with many openings leading to an antechamber with a bench.
Numerous movable finds were found over the entire excavation site, as e.g. on the ground floor of the so-called “metal crafting furnace” where the paved ground floor space was excavated as well as a section of the earlier layer in which the latter’s central pillar had is foundations.
A special find, however, are parts of a large, 30cm-high rhyton (ritual vase) in the shape of a bull’s head, located in one of the rooms on the west side of the building.
Lastly, the answer was found to the origin of the stone used to pave the building’s floor, slabs as large as 3x1m, after exploring the topography of the region, about 20km from Zominthos, in the Tallaia Mountains near the village of Doxaro. A quarry can be found there which produces large limestone slabs resembling marble.
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| Coin discovered while excavating the palace of Zominthos [Credit: Ministry of Culture and Sports/ Archaeological Society at Athens] |
Besides, it is a unique religious, economic and productive Minoan centre, at an altitude of 1,200m, perfectly organized, with many sites of worship, workshops for the treatment of raw materials and crafting of artefacts.
These include the ceramics workshop with a kiln next to it and the furnace for coppersmiths, as well as great storage facilities such as jars for storage of products from the mountains counting among them the famous Psiloritis herbs and wool.
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| View of the limestone quarry in the Tallaia Mountains near the village of Doxaro [Credit: Ministry of Culture and Sports/ Archaeological Society at Athens] |
Established about halfway between Knossos and the Ideon Andron, Zominthos was for the Minoans the site that could replace the sacred cave in the winter months of the year, when access to it became difficult.
After twenty years of systematic excavation begun by the late Yannis Sakellarakis and carried on by Efi Sapouna-Sakellaraki, the palace of Zominthos has at last revealed many of its secrets.
Source: Greek Ministry of Culture and Sports via Archaeology & Arts [September 09, 2018]
from The Archaeology News Network https://ift.tt/2Nz6jv7
Breaking News: In the footsteps of Minoan worshippers at Zominthos - News Paper








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